• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

E-Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology

ejssm.org

  • Home
  • About
    • About
    • For Authors
    • For Editors
    • For Reviewers
  • Announcements
  • Archives
  • Current
  • Bibliography
  • Contact Us

Vol 8-7 2013

December 4, 2013

Adjusted Tornado Probabilities

Holly M. Widen, James B. Elsner, Rizalino B. Cruz, Guang Xing, Erik Fraza, Loury Migliorelli, Sarah Strazzo, Cameron Amrine, Brendan Mulholland, Michael Patterson, Laura Michaels

Abstract

Tornado occurrence rates computed from the available reports are biased low relative to the unknown true rates. To correct for this low bias, the authors demonstrate a method to estimate the annual probability of being struck by a tornado that uses the average report density estimated as a function of distance from nearest city/town center. The method is demonstrated on Kansas and then applied to 15 other tornado-prone states from Nebraska to Tennessee. States are ranked according to their adjusted tornado rate and comparisons are made with raw rates published elsewhere. The adjusted rates, expressed as return periods, are <1250 y for four states, including Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. The expected annual number of people exposed to tornadoes is highest for Illinois followed by Alabama and Indiana. For the four states with the highest tornado rates, exposure increases since 1980 are largest for Oklahoma (24%) and Alabama (23%).

Full Text: PDF

Citation:
Widen, H. M., and Coauthors, 2013: Adjusted tornado probabilities. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (7), 1-12.

Keywords:
tornadoes, climatology, quality control, data processing, societal impacts, statistics

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: climatology, data processing, quality control, societal impacts, statistics, tornadoes

Primary Sidebar

Search

Archives

Categories

Information

For Authors
For Editors
For Reviewers

Downloads

The Complete EJSSM Guide for Authors, Editors, and Reviewers (PDF)
Author Template (DOC)
Reference Template (PDF)

Copyright © 2025 · Infinity Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in